The Holy Roman Empire was the strange, durable centre of medieval and early modern Europe — a loose federation of German-speaking principalities, free cities, and ecclesiastical territories nominally ruled by an elected emperor. Tracing its claim to Charlemagne’s coronation in 800, it lasted in some form for a millennium, never quite a unified state nor merely a collection of rivals. The Reformation split it along religious lines; the Thirty Years’ War devastated it. Its end came in 1806, when Napoleon’s victories forced Emperor Francis II to dissolve the empire rather than see the crown taken from him.
Worth remembering
- Voltaire quipped that it was 'neither holy, nor Roman, nor an empire.'
- At its largest it comprised some 300 semi-autonomous states, free cities, and bishoprics across central Europe.
Sources
A graveyard tradition: leave a stone to show you came, and remembered.